Credibility
is the invisible currency that sustains international leadership. A country’s
power is not only measured in military budgets or economic size but also in its
ability to inspire confidence and trust among allies, partners, and even rivals.
For much of the post-war period, the United States carried that mantle, not
without flaws, but with a consistency that reassured its friends and anchored
the global order. In recent years, however, that currency has depreciated.
Donald Trump’s return to the White House, defined by tariff battles,
transactional diplomacy, and retreat from multilateralism, has eroded America’s
credibility at a pace unseen in modern times.
The clearest signal of this shift
came in the image of Xi Jinping, Narendra Modi, and Vladimir Putin clasping
hands at a recent summit – a gesture that symbolised not just by a photo
opportunity but a reordering of global trust.
Trump’s
trade wars, launched under the banner of ‘America First,’ were meant to show
strength but instead revealed shortsightedness. Punitive tariffs against India,
Japan and long-standing European allies unsettled the fabric of global
commerce.
Markets, used to predictable American leadership, became volatile.
Businesses struggled with uncertainty. Governments that once considered
Washington a reliable partner began hedging their bets, turning toward
alternative centres of influence.
In bypassing international mechanisms such as
the World Trade Organisation, Trump demonstrated a willingness to disregard the
very rules the US had spent decades building, a move that left even America’s
closest allies questioning its commitment to fairness.
The
consequences of this approach are not confined to Asia or Europe; they
reverberate deeply in Africa. East Africa in particular has long been a theatre
where global powers compete for influence. Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania, once
seen as natural partners for Washington in trade and security, increasingly
look to Beijing for stability.
China’s Belt and Road Initiative has poured
billions into infrastructure projects across the region – from railways in
Kenya to ports in Tanzania – while American engagement appears inconsistent and
reactive. Where Washington has offered lectures about governance and
conditional aid, Beijing has offered visible results, from highways to energy
grids. The message resonates: while the US retreats into tariff wars and
inward-looking policies, China is writing itself into the story of Africa’s
development.
The
credibility gap widens further when one considers Trump’s disdain for
multilateral institutions. His withdrawal from global agreements on climate and
health may have played well to domestic audiences but was disastrous for
countries in the Global South. East Africa faces the brunt of climate change,
from prolonged droughts in Kenya and Ethiopia to destructive floods in Uganda.
When Washington disengages from collective climate action, it signals to
African nations that their struggles are secondary to America’s internal
politics. Meanwhile, China positions itself as a committed partner in climate
financing, offering both rhetoric and resources. In this contrast, African
states read a clear story: the US cannot be counted on to uphold shared
responsibilities.
Trust
in America’s leadership has also diminished among African publics. For decades,
Washington wielded soft power in the region through education, cultural
exchange and development programmes. Yet under Trump, cuts to USAID budgets and
an emphasis on transactional relationships have chipped away at that goodwill.
Kenyan policymakers, for instance, recall the Trump administration’s push for
skewed trade deals that appeared less like partnerships and more like
impositions. At the same time, Chinese universities offer scholarships, and
Chinese companies create jobs in Nairobi and Addis Ababa, building a narrative
of partnership that Washington once enjoyed but now risks losing.
The
Xi-Modi-Putin handshake is thus emblematic of a broader reality: the world is
diversifying its options. East Africa no longer looks exclusively to Washington
for leadership; it weighs offers from Beijing, Moscow, New Delhi and even
regional blocs. This multipolar moment could have been an opportunity for the US
to reinforce its relevance through consistency and respect for partners.
Instead, Trump’s policies have amplified doubts about America’s staying power.
Nations in East Africa are pragmatic; they follow where reliability leads.
Today, reliability points eastward.
Restoring
credibility is possible, but it will not come easily. Trust once lost is slow
to return. For Washington, this means more than reversing tariffs or rejoining
agreements; it requires a renewed commitment to partnership that values African
agency. Kenya and its neighbours do not want lectures – they want predictable
collaboration, investment and genuine respect for sovereignty. America must
rediscover that credibility is built not only by projecting power but by
practising humility, listening to partners and showing up when it matters most.
Trump’s
approach has left scars that extend well beyond Washington’s traditional
spheres of influence. By turning trade into a weapon, retreating from
collective action and treating allies as adversaries, he has accelerated the
erosion of US credibility on the world stage. The effects are visible from
Brussels to Beijing, but perhaps most poignantly in Nairobi, Kampala and Dar es
Salaam, where the future is being shaped by choices made far from American shores.
As the US struggles with its own inward battles, East Africa and much of the
Global South are finding new partners, new leaders and new anchors of trust.
In
the end, credibility is not inherited; it is earned daily. Trump’s policies
have squandered much of the goodwill that America accumulated over decades. The
Xi-Modi-Putin moment may prove temporary, but the signal it sent – that others
are willing to lead where America falters – is lasting. For East Africa, the
lesson is clear: the US can no longer be counted on with certainty. For
America, the challenge is equally stark: to restore credibility, it must return
to the practice of consistency and cooperation that once made it the trusted
leader of the international order.